Montana
State University’s Kay Kirkpatrick, a junior from Dillon, has been named
co‑winner of the Alice T. Schafer Prize given tothe nation's
best female undergraduate mathematics student. Kirkpatrick shares the award
with Melanie Wood, a student at Duke University. The Schafer prize is called a
"genius" award for undergraduate math students, according to John
Miller of MSU's Computational Biology Center, one of Kirkpatrick's
mentors. In addition to her own
coursework, Kay, who also won a Congressionally funded Goldwater Scholarship
this year, is teaching an undergraduate class in the language of mathematics as
well as serving as the student fellow in a freshman seminar for the Honors
Program. She describes her passions as rock climbing, classical piano and
abstract mathematics.

Glen
Chamberlain Barrett, an adjunct English faculty member at Montana State University, has received an
award identifying her as one of the six most promising women writers in
the country. Barrett, who teaches
composition classes at MSU, is the recipient of a 2001 Rona Jaffe Foundation
Writer's Award, a program created to identify and support women writers in
the early stages of their careers. "One of the things that makes this so
exciting is that this (award) is not something one can be nominated for,"
said Sara Jayne Steen, chair of the MSU English department. "A really
distinguished group of writers and editors review the work of a group of what
they consider to be the most promising women writers in America.”

Greg
Weisenstein, Dean of the College of Education, Health and Human Development at Montana
State University, is helping to introduce choice in the educational system in
Eastern Europe. For the past year Weisenstein has been working with the
Republic of Moldova to restructure its 12 institutions of higher education.
This fall, the project is seeing its first outcome as the entering freshman
class at the State University of Moldova will, for the first time, be able to
take classes outside of their major, enroll in a minor, and take elective courses. AThe people of Central and
Eastern Europe see an opportunity today to change their lives and improve the
quality of life," Weisenstein said. He noted further, "We lead the
world in part because of the way we educate people. Our system fosters
creativity and innovation. Once the Moldovan educators understood the value of our system, they were very
quick learners.”

Those working there call it
"the pile," says MSU researcher Cynthia Marshall, referring to
the eight story mass of rubble and steel left in the wake of the Sept. 11
terrorism attack on the World Trade Center
in New York City. Marshall, a Veterinarian and post doctoral
researcher working in the Paleontology Lab at the Museum of the Rockies, was at
the disaster site for a week to provide medical care for the search and
rescue dogs brought in for the daunting task of body recovery. "The
people I met while I was in New York were fabulous," Marshall said.
"They liked the fact that people
cared and were coming from all over the country to help.”

A new academic program in
family financial planning at MSU-Bozeman produces students trained to
perform individual and group financial planning and counseling. In order to further that training and to
provide service to the MSU student community, the MSU Department of Health
and Human Development has joined forces with the Student Assistance Foundation
of Montana to establish an office for financial education and
counseling. This office, called SAFE
(Student Advocates for Financial Education), is located in Herrick Hall on the
MSU campus. Ms. Bernadine Warwood is an employee of the Student
Assistance Foundation and is serving as the manager of the SAFE program. Dr. Deborah Haynes, Associate
Professor of family and consumer economics, is the faculty instructor in both
the undergraduate and the graduate family financial planning courses and also
the SAFE program director. The SAFE office is opening its doors on Friday,
November 16. Members of the Board are invited to visit the office on Friday
after the adjournment of the Board of Regents meeting.

MSU’s Spirit of the West Marching
Band, under the direction of Assistant Professor Brad Fuster,
will be performing in the 2001 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York
City next week. In addition to an on-site audience of over five million,
the 180 member Band will be seen by some 60 million television viewers around
the world. The Band is also scheduled to appear on NBC’s “Today Show” on
Wednesday, November 21.

MSU
microbiologist Dr. Barry Pyle was in Atlanta last week to consult with
the Centers for Disease Control on the successful modification of a
commercially available instrument that allows detection of anthrax and other
agents within a few hours versus the current sampling time of a few days.
Pyle worked on the Defense Department EPSCoR project with fellow MSU scientists
Sue Broadaway and Dr. Gordon McFeters.

MSU’s Army
ROTC Bobcat Battalion triumphed in the annual Ranger Challenge competition
that includes physical training, weapons assembly/disassembly, land navigation,
rope bridge construction, and grenade assault. The annual competition includes
eight person student teams from MSU, UM, Idaho, Idaho State and Boise State.
Both MSU’s Alpha and Bravo teams won their respective divisions. MSU’s teams
were prepared by faculty members Sergeant Major Scott Irish and Sergeant First
Class Daniel Wallace.